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"carping" Definitions
  1. characterized by fussy or petulant faultfinding; querulous: carping criticism.
  2. petty faultfinding.
"carping" Synonyms
critical complaining grouchy grousing grumbling hypercritical moaning overcritical captious cavilling(UK) censorious criticising(UK) criticizing(US) fault-finding grouching nagging niggling quibbling whining bleating scoffing mocking sardonic scornful cynical sneering satirical derisive caustic contemptuous jeering disparaging taunting sharp ironical biting cutting mordant acerbic satiric fretful irritable grumpy cross petulant testy irascible touchy peevish fractious cranky crabby ratty snappish crotchety huffy tetchy querulous splenetic crabbed malcontent discontented disgruntled displeased annoyed dissatisfied irritated aggrieved resentful unhappy vexed peeved piqued discontent disaffected malcontented unsatisfied restive criticism griping nitpicking dissatisfaction faultfinding grumble grouse grouch complaint moan whinge wail beef grievance gripe whingeing pedantry dogmatism exactness literalism precision punctiliousness sophistry fastidiousness finicality finickiness formalism meticulousness overscrupulousness perfectionism purism scrupulousness captiousness caviling(US) censure disapproval disparagement condemnation denunciation panning reproval castigation critique opprobrium slamming admonishment broadside chastisement slating stick upbraiding abuse chiding demur objection exception demurral dissent opposition remonstrance protest protestation expostulation scruple demurrer dispute fuss stink challenge difficulty recalcitrance compunction beefing censuring bellyaching kvetching henpecking bullying intimidating tormenting domineering harassing hectoring pestering scolding dogging hounding needling badgering berating bothering condemning knocking denouncing blasting lambasting arraigning attacking pillorying roasting besmirching denigrating deprecating maligning pettifogging altercating argufying avoiding bickering chicaning disputing equivocating evading fencing flip-flopping hassling pretending prevaricating fretting worrying agonising(UK) agonizing(US) anguishing brooding stewing moping fearing pining sighing sorrowing stressing sweating troubling upsetting oneself concerning oneself feeling uneasy feeling unhappy quarrelling(UK) quarreling(US) arguing fighting rowing brawling disagreeing differing scrapping squabbling wrangling falling out sparring spatting clashing brabbling More

130 Sentences With "carping"

How to use carping in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "carping" and check conjugation/comparative form for "carping". Mastering all the usages of "carping" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This points to two other reasons for the carping response.
Outside carping against Mr Trump will not diminish his tribal support.
So the jockeying, backbiting and carping might continue for some time.
Totally unfair to keep carping on that now that the election's over.
Someone is going to pay him, analytic carping and character-related grumbling aside.
Instead of carping and criticizing, Republicans and Democrats are rapidly communing and cooperating.
People carping about imaginary trade wars say that this is nothing to worry about.
Outside carping against Mr Trump will not diminish his tribal support from Republican voters.
Imagine the carping, caviling nastiness of it, the solipsistic conceit of such a deed.
The point here is that Jordan's carping is sound and fury, signifying not much.
That's what Wall Street should be rooting for, instead of carping about Washington's trade wars.
Some of that is carping from the left, which simply sees him as too moderate.
We in the media aren't driving it, either, though there's constant carping along those lines.
Had he converted either opportunity, there would be no carping about the former champion losing ground.
It appears that 14 years of carping from the peanut gallery has seeped into the Twittersphere.
They got cleaned up a lot of that very obvious witch, bitch, ex-wife, carping stuff.
His constant carping on European and other allies risks jeopardizing one of America's most important counterterrorism assets.
Normally the next day the German press is full of critical, carping articles about the winning book.
Amid the neo-Luddite contrarianism, a shining truth rises above all the (Magi-)carping: Pokémon Go comes in peace.
Some supporters, who characterized criticisms as predictable carping from the left, hailed the White House's response to the tragedy.
As a result, the generations pile up, carping, criticizing and advising, and no one ever comes into their own.
Fox News remained Mr. Trump's news venue of choice, despite the president's occasional carping about the channel's insufficient loyalty.
At a summer party for Conservative lawmakers, May told lawmakers that there should be "no backbiting, no carping", Sky said.
At the same time, they feel besieged by what they see as a hostile Washington establishment and resent the carping.
Earlier on Friday, the foreign ministry expressed "extreme dissatisfaction" with the proposed U.S. bill, calling it "irresponsible carping and crude interference".
For a president who runs hot and cold on nearly all of his advisers, private carping may not mean that much.
It is not just talk-radio-style carping to wonder if the Bulldogs, at last, can run with the big dogs.
They do better carping from the sidelines, tugging policy in their direction while reserving the right to lob political bombs when necessary.
That may well be so; though carping about a campaign, five weeks before an election, is often a proxy for shaky confidence.
In 2009 his carping helped to bring down the prime minister of the day, Abdullah Badawi, and usher Mr Najib into power.
Maybe your colleague or boss took credit for your work, but carping about the problem to your coworkers rarely helps, Oliver says.
When the president announces a plan to unilaterally naturalize every DACA recipient, what progressive wants to be the one carping about executive overreach?
Fingers around hot whisky on a cold evening, carping and moaning about postage charges, eBay T&Cs and PayPal's ever-increasing transaction times.
Indeed, despite all his carping about America's withdrawal from the INF Treaty, it was Russia that had been violating that treaty for years.
I COULD BE CYNICAL ABOUT THE WHOLE IDEA, WHAT -- WE GET OUR TAX RATE DOWN NEAR WHERE THEY, ARE THEY CARPING ABOUT THAT?
But I digress, as does Ms. Arcade, moving from a brief history of the advertising industry to carping about tourist hordes invading the city.
Having handed the evangelicals so many longed-for prizes, and offered more, why should people jeopardise this by carping when the president occasionally disappoints them?
And conversely, when we denigrate pink, are we simply being reactionary, carping about an innocuous cultural trait the way radio listeners complain about vocal fry?
Carping about America's balance sheet is a political tactic as much as anything else, a clever way of arguing that the other party is irresponsible.
That he's fighting back by impugning his critics' motives, stonewalling investigators and carping about the media shouldn't disturb anyone, not if we're being grown-ups.
But on an April visit to the Upper West Side brownstone he shares with his husband and manager, Howard Stokar, Mr. Wuorinen was characteristically carping.
Rather than carping about how weird the Cybertruck looks, we should appreciate Tesla&aposs bold attempt to enliven electric-car design, which has gotten desperately dull.
" Here is Caroline, originally from Belfast, sizing up the public-housing estate where she lives: "The grounds are empty except for the carping birds and trees.
They would finally move past the "smoke a pack a day" threats of the virulently anti-wolf crowd, not to mention the incessant carping of environmentalists.
For Cercas, these are the forgeries of jealousy, the carping of a later generation that has come to take the liberties of modern Spain for granted.
To the Editor: As a longtime information technology manager and consultant, now retired, I am puzzled by the carping about gender diversity in the American I.T. industry.
This ancient dialogue merely illustrates that people have been carping on since time-out-of-time that this new technology or that one is going to ruin everything, and the youth are going to be corrupted by it and become deficient, lazy and stupid — especially compared with the peerless and singular virtues of the generation doing the carping — and the whole world is going to go to hell in a handbasket.
Tryout tours are nothing new; for decades they were the standard way of refining material beyond the notice of critics and (more recently) the carping of chat rooms.
So was all the carping about water in Rio unfounded Brazil-bashing—just like the debunked claim by a group of American athletes that they were robbed at gunpoint?
Ryan spent eight years carping about the need for more oversight of President Obama but when it when he came time to provide oversight of Trump, he did nothing.
Manager Aaron Boone was ejected in the sixth inning by the home plate umpire Pat Hoberg for persistent carping from the dugout — the first ejection of Boone's nascent managing career.
She inspired Juliana, the heroine of "High Castle," who has no trouble slashing a Nazi operative's throat, as well as a number of shrill, carping, unhappy wives in other books.
Launch day snafus are common for any consumer internet product, but this one is apparently large enough that Disney can't brush it off as carping from a few disgruntled tweeters.
If this imbalance were limited to a single chamber of the legislature, or a single election cycle, the Democrats' frequent carping about a stacked electoral deck might sound like sour grapes.
One source says that Mr Davis and Mr Robbins work closely, dismissing the carping of former mandarins as "willy-waving" that is beneath them: "They are both focused on their jobs".
But, if Trump only needs 51 votes to pass the bill and Republicans continue to remain mum about his own taxes, all of Democrats' carping won't make a bit of difference.
Still, it's disappointing to see Hays slurping from a bottle of Jack Daniels and carping at his wife, because it brings him right in line with the detectives on previous seasons.
Despite US President Donald Trump's carping about NATO members not spending enough on defense and describing the alliance as "obsolete," US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis Thursday reiterated Washington's commitment to the alliance.
It's not disgruntled parents carping about mop tops, or hippies, or yuppies, or goths, or emo/scene kids, or VSCO girls, though people certainly do still criticize specific aspects of youth culture.
" Krasner later described the tweets as "just a lot of carping about 'We shouldn't have fired these people,' or 'We shouldn't have this policy,' or 'The city is burning,' or whatever nonsense.
The endless carping about "Benghazi" has produced virtually nothing of moment, and neither formal nor media inquiries into the Clinton Foundation have uncovered any clear example of a "pay-to-play" scheme.
Those last two industries spend a great deal of energy examining and then carping about popular culture while only recently starting to systemically criticize the macho jock culture that generates male toxicity.
She has outlasted not just rivals but also designer carping, competition from other magazines, not to mention the internet, criticism about her manner and her model choices, and multiple trends, fashion and social.
It is the only one of its kind in the world, and any other fashion brand in the world would take it in a minute, including the competitors that are carping at us.
Republicans have so far seemed more interested in carping about an unaccountable agency constraining lending and crushing small banks (it's not, by the way) than actually undertaking a frontal assault on consumer protection.
And this all came amid constant carping about how America's NATO allies needed to pay their "fair share," and after Trump's past musings about how he might not defend allies if they didn't.
Trump's newfound pragmatism is infinitely preferable to the threat of nuclear war that used to hang over all of us, so it's mystifying to see Democrats carping about any possible North Korea deal.
Beijing's proposition to other countries is simple: unlike Washington, with its carping on about democracy and human rights, or insistence on IMF-style austerity, China wants "win-win solutions" that benefit both parties.
The prime minister is pleading for an end to the ferocious "backbiting and carping" in the Conservative Party, and she lectured her cabinet this week on the importance of keeping internal discussions confidential.
Holding hearings, screaming at administration witnesses and carping from the sidelines is not a substitute for a real, honest and straightforward assessment — before, not after, American troops and pilots are sent into harm's way.
Instead of carping on problems that have been discussed ad nauseam in other talking forums, Germany should have concentrated on the G-20's essential mission to promote world economic growth and financial stability.
Since Britain's Brexit vote there has been much debate in national capitals on a new defence initiative, perhaps even setting up an operational military headquarters, which will be easier to do without a carping Britain.
ALREADY SOME OF OUR ALLIES ARE ALREADY CARPING ABOUT THE NATIONAL SECURITY ANGLE IN THIS, SAYING IT'S A CONVENIENT USE THAT'S BEEN DONE BEFORE BY THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION IN SITUATIONS WHERE IT REALLY DOESN'T APPLY.
Michael Moritz, a partner at Sequoia Capital and an early investor in Google and other tech companies, said that carping about big technology companies was a long tradition in tech but that challengers always appear.
It's Grammy time, and as always, watching the awards ceremony on Sunday will include a subtext of cross-generational carping: "They don't make music the way they used to," the boomers and Gen Xers will mutter.
The mere prospect of a meeting removes that risk for the foreseeable future, which is a major relief for South Korea, whose president deserves credit for his steadfast engagement of the North despite carping from his critics.
She seemed to see fashion and our obsession with what our role models wear as opportunity and tool, or at least to have come round to that view, after carping early on about unfair gender-related focus.
But they're all struggling with characters who feel a little too off-the-shelf — while MacLean's dialogue has flavor, his people lean toward cliché (the carping mother-in-law, the crook's wife who really runs the show).
Mr. Moore, who never conceded to Mr. Jones, then spent month after month carping about the outcome, the influence of Washington's most powerful Republicans and the misconduct accusations that transformed the race he had appeared poised to win.
In a sense, artists who condemn criticism are relying on the old idea that "it's the thought that counts": Because the intention of the giver is generous and pure, any carping about the gift is cruelly small-minded.
But Federer, a remarkable champion and ambassador, has clearly earned the right to play on as long as he pleases without much carping from the chattering classes, even if an 18th Grand Slam singles title now looks increasingly unlikely.
Walter's constant carping at the state of his city, ranging from its deplorable garbage collection to the ugliness of its "city hall-cum-opera," the Stopera, only serves to underline the lack of progress he has made as mayor.
Furthermore, Ms. Conway may well be the victim of sexist comments in other regards, but carping about the clothing of politicians has been a national sport since the days of George Washington, well before there were women in office.
Yet for a single metric, it carries a heavy load, going to the heart of the case for Mr Nadal and cutting through much of the anecdotal carping that leads fans to discount one title or grant another extra credit.
ROME (Reuters) - Europeans must contain their squabbling and carping about the EU if the Union is to survive, leaders warned on Saturday as they marked the 60th anniversary of its founding in Rome by signing a formal declaration of unity.
This carping is absolutely racialized, in ways that are unconscious and unconscionable and just awe-inspiringly idiotic—the people so keen on telling Newton "no" have traditionally been a lot less so where equally brash non-black quarterbacks have been concerned.
The man who proverbially would never tell a lie sure could prevaricate, and Washington's carping about his troops, his officers and his lot in life — "I distrust everything," he grumbled in 1776 — transforms the demigod into a sometimes petulant mortal.
Historians, scientists and academic pedants carped about its audacity of scope — but the book, modeled after Jared Diamond's "Guns, Germs, and Steel" (a book that also received its share of carping and academic envy), presented a sweeping macrohistory, often marvelously.
Merkel spent the week waving through all Cameron's carping about migrant benefits, standing up for his demands as "logical and reasonable" before the summit, and intervening again and again in the summit room like a tiger mom at her kid's debating tournament.
But on many issues, Senate Democrats — including their new leader, Chuck Schumer of New York — are expected to pivot from postelection carping to active thwarting, using complex Senate procedures and political messaging to slow or perhaps block elements of Mr. Trump's agenda.
Add to that the carping on the "rigged" election, and his assertion and that he won't necessarily accept the results of the election ("I will tell you at the time" and "I'll keep you in suspense"), and you have a candidate preaching to his choir.
Yet in spite of persistent carping that Mr. Sanders is nothing but a quixotic crusader — during their first debate, Hillary Clinton cracked, "I'm a progressive, but I'm a progressive who likes to get things done" — he has often been an effective, albeit modest, legislator.
Since then, Google has done what any self-respecting mega-corporation would do in a situation like this: Take a series of well-publicized half-measures to establish itself as "advertiser-friendly," win Wal-Mart back, and get the carping press off its case.
"Supporters take away he's a fighter, that he's never backs down, that he never gives in to the carping critics and that he will stand his ground no matter what the situation and hold his head high in the face of unrelenting criticism," he said.
In recent years, revisionist historians, sardonic politicians and even crooning poets have come around to carping that a deeply flawed America with its history of ill-conceived wars, of slavery and endemic racism, as well as its tacit barriers preventing social and economic mobility, is nothing special.
" Later, during the 10th century, a Christian monk named Hucbald of St. Amand wrote "In Praise of Baldness," in which he imagines, with sadistic glee, the gantlet of woe awaiting his hecklers: "Compress that cruel cad, captured for the crime of carping at all the bald in bootless brute behavior.
Prior to mass access to the internet, football managers took their medicine on the back pages of the tabloids and major broadsheets; the carping and caviling was done in print, as well as a couple of times a week on The Big Match and its pre-eminent competitor, Match of The Day.
While presenting himself to voters as an efficient and apolitical manger above the hubbub of carping politicians, the 63-year-old construction engineer has had trouble erasing memories of his government's failure last winter to clear streets of snow and buildings of dangerous icicles, the most basic duties of all municipal authorities in Russia.
And with the president heading this weekend to Singapore, liberal New York Times columnist Nick Kristof says this: "Sadly, Democrats in Congress are responding in a quite Trumpian way: They seem more concerned with undermining him than supporting a peace process with North Korea ... "Trump&aposs newfound pragmatism is infinitely preferable to the threat of nuclear war that used to hang over all of us, so it&aposs mystifying to see Democrats carping about any possible North Korea deal.
Armstrong, Thomas. "Handel's 'Messiah'", The Times, 2 April 1943, p. 5 Bridge's range of enthusiasms caused some carping.
Ignacy Fik, 20 lat literatury polskiej (19181938), Cracow, Spółdzielnia Wydawnicza Czytelnik, 1939, p. 84; 2nd ed., Cracow, Spółdzielnia Pracy i Użytkowników "Placówka", 1949, p. 91. Another carping critic, Ludwik Fryde, for his part, accused Łobodowski of "actorship, playacting".
12) It is sometimes claimed that Wagner caricatured Hanslick in his opera Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg as the carping critic Beckmesser (whose name was originally to be Veit Hanslich).Newman, Ernest. The Life of Richard Wagner, volume 3. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1976, , p.
It also contains a most curious commentary on Desportes, in which Malherbe's minute and carping style of verbal criticism is displayed on the great scale. Malherbe's two most important disciples were François Maynard and Racan; Claude Favre de Vaugelas is credited with having purified French diction at about the same time.
Indologist B. N. K. Sharma writes, "The Advaitakālānala is a scathing criticism of the Madhvamatamukhamardana of Appayya. The carping criticisms and bitter personal attacks of the Dikshita are vigorously returned by Narayana. He loses no opportunity to pay the critic in his coin and with compound interest. The tone of the work is thus retaliatory and bitingly sarcastic".
Maja drinks and begins carping about Hester's insatiable sexual appetite: "She big hungry tunnel." Hester apologizes for Maja's outbursts, explaining that "Maja has been drinking since this morning." The writer leaves, planning to complete the interview the next day. Chinaski returns with a photographer, another down-on-his-luck alcoholic like himself, to find Maja still drunk, still pounding away on his drum.
His columns were perceived as being deliberately controversial, and, as time went by, increasingly regarded as carping. In later life, Barnes suffered from depressive illness. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and treated with a combination of medication, mainly diazepam, and electroconvulsive therapy. He spent much of his last years in and out of clinics seeking treatment for his condition.
In their overview A Catalogue of Crime (1971/89) Barzun & Taylor noted that the book was "A great achievement, despite some critics' carping. The people, the motive, the cipher, and the detection are all topnotch. Here, too, is the first (and definitive) use of hemophilia as a misleading fact. And surely the son, the mother, and her self-deluded gigolo are definitive types".
Sir John Elliot in 1981 said the work "will remain, despite all carping, the authoritative narrative; nor does the story want in the telling thereof". Men and Power 1917–1918 was published in 1956. It is not a coherent narrative, but is divided by separate episodes centred on one man, such as Carson, Robertson, Rothermere and others. The reviews were favourable, with Taylor's review in The Observer greatly pleasing Beaverbrook.
They are remarkable for a prodigious metrical inventiveness and a genuine gift of melody. In subject matter they are entirely within the pale of classical, conventional love poetry. Sumarokov's literary criticism is usually carping and superficial, but it did much to inculcate on the Russian public the canons of classical taste. He was a loyal follower of Voltaire, with whom he prided himself on having exchanged several letters.
The book was published by Fantagraphics Books, a comics publisher who had published Theroux's monographs on Edward Gorey and Al Capp. Notably, it is the first all-prose novel released by the publisher. Theroux stated they were the only ones "willing to publish the full manuscript without carping or cozy abridgements." The cover design by the author, features an unreferenced photo of Evelyn Nesbit taken by Rudolf Eickemeyer in 1901.
Though he was wont to shield hunting from the "carping speaches of the enemies thereof", he warned his readers against using the sport as "an occupation to spend therein daies, moneths, and yeres, to the hinderance of the service of God, her maistie or your Countrey". Cokayne dedicated the Treatise to his patron, the 7th Earl of Shrewsbury, and illustrated the book with woodcuts of various game animals.
Pogrebin, Robin. "At Tonys, Millie Is Tops, but Its Book and Score Aren't; Winners Include Stritch and Albee, Private Lives and Urinetown". The New York Times, 3 June 2002 In 2009 at its new home, the Hampstead Theatre presented a revival directed by Lucy Bailey, with Jasper Britton as Elyot and Claire Price as Amanda.Billington, Michael. "Cocktails and carping on Coward's trip to the dark side", The Guardian, 28 January 2009, p.
The mines were apparently not sold, but operation was clearly hindered by Grant's lack of money. Grant also bought the mines at Strontian in Scotland for a modest sum and sent Derbyshire miners there to develop them in 1729, also a relative of his wife, to manage them.L. Willies, 'Sir Archibald Grant of Monymusk Bart.: a "Carping Maintainer" and his Derbyshire Agents', Bulletin of the Peak District Mining History Society 12(4) (1994), 23-27.
A report in The Economist said it "had taken 70 years to plan [the motorway], 12 to build it and just one to find it was inadequate". Thatcher rebuked the negative response, calling it "carping and criticism". Traffic levels quickly exceeded the maximum design capacity. Two months before opening, the government admitted that the three-lane section between Junctions 11 and 13 was inadequate, and that it would have to be widened to four.
The carping comments from those on the sidelines, who view the candidates as slimy self- degraders desperate for status, provide an amusing counterpoint to the seriousness of the contestants.Margaret Taylor, untitled review of Playing at Politics, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 12 (2006): 983–984, . The reviewer for the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute found the book a "witty examination of British political processes" and "[recommended it] to all would-be politicians and their tutors".
During the Suez Crisis, he defended the Conservative Government against opposition "carping criticisms". One of the chief opposition critics of the Government over Suez was his own party leader, Jo Grimond. He served as National Insurance Commissioner for Wales, 1967–86, and as president of St Davids University College, Lampeter, 1977–92. One of the libraries and a research centre at Lampeter carry his name and Roderick Bowen is also the name of one of the student halls of residence.
In 2012, it was reported that the idea of using part of Christchurch's residential red zone for an international rowing regatta course known as East Lake had found the support of Brownlee as Earthquake Recovery Minister. In September 2012, Brownlee accused residents in Christchurch's newly created TC3 zone of "carping and moaning" for comments they made in a survey conducted by the main local newspaper. The comments were about perceived inaction by the authorities, including the government. He apologised soon after.
Critics deemed it a strong improvement over Glitter, but not something that would re-establish her popularity as in the early stages of her career. After enduring three years of "carping" from critics, Carey planned her return to music. On November 18, 2004, she revealed on her website that the name of the album would be The Emancipation of Mimi. While Carey was recording the album, Island Records executive L.A. Reid had learned that close friends referred to the singer as "Mimi".
"lock of matted hair"Tait (sometimes written tate and tett), a lock of matted hair. Mackay's Dictionary (1888); Tate, tait, teat, tatte 2. "Lock, applied to hair" John Jamieson's Dictionary (Abridged, 1867).) on its mane in A, nine hung on its mane in E, and three bells on either side of the bridle in R, whereas she had nine bells in her hand in D, offered as a prize for his harping and carping (music and storytelling). Thomas mistakenly addresses her as the "Queen of Heaven" (i.e.
Citizens of McMinn County had long been concerned about political corruption and possible election fraud though some of the complaints, especially at first, may have been partisan carping. The U.S. Department of Justice had investigated allegations of electoral fraud in 1940, 1942, and 1944, but had not taken action. Voter fraud and vote control perpetuated McMinn County's political problems. Manipulation of the poll tax and vote counting were the primary methods, but it was common for dead voters' votes to appear in McMinn County elections.
Reviewing recent operations at an Army Commanders Conference on 7 December at Doullens, Haig commented how six months earlier, before Messines, the British had expected offensives from Russia, Italy and France and had instead been left carrying the burden.Sheffield 2011, p. 257. Lloyd George (6 December) was particularly angry at the embarrassing Cambrai reverse, at the hands of "a few" German divisions, after Haig had insisted for the last two years that his offensives were weakening them. When told of this, Haig wrote to Robertson that Lloyd George should either sack him or else cease his "carping criticism".
The action takes place in a BBC studio in 1961, where a motley crew of "bright young things" and aging actors produce a futuristic drama set in the year 2006, which of course is a world of space flight, ray guns, and contact with aliens. The show is called "Tomorrow, Today!" and is basically a soap opera. The lead roles are played by Nigel Lavery (Peter Bowles) and Sylvia Hann (Cheryl Campbell) who hate their jobs only slightly more than they hate each other. Their off-mike conversations are laced with carping comments and innuendo about each other's long-lost youth and popularity.
This motivation of Malthus's work was disregarded by McCulloch, who responded that there was nothing to be gained "by carping at definitions, and quibbling about the meaning to be attached to" words. Given that statement, it is not surprising that McCulloch's review failed to address the rules of chapter 1 and did not discuss the definitions of chapter 10; he also barely mentioned Malthus's critiques of other writers. In spite of this and in the wake of McCulloch's scathing review, the reputation of Malthus as economist dropped away for the rest of his life. On the other hand, Malthus did have supporters, including Thomas Chalmers, some of the Oriel Noetics, Richard Jones and William Whewell from Cambridge.
Cetshwayo in 1878In 1878, Sir Henry Bartle Frere, British High Commissioner for South Africa, sought to confederate South Africa the same way Canada had been, and felt that this could not be done while there was a powerful and independent Zulu state. So he began to demand reparations for border infractions and forced his subordinates to send carping messages complaining about Cetshwayo's rule, seeking to provoke the Zulu King. They succeeded, but Cetshwayo kept calm, considering the British to be his friends and being aware of the power of the British army. He did, however, state that he and Frere were equals and since he did not complain about how Frere ruled, the same courtesy should be observed by Frere in regards to Zululand.
2 Brann went so far as to claim that a Hale victory would "please Hitler".The Lewiston Daily Sun, Sep 12, 1942, p. 1 Hale started his own congressional service with equally alarmist rhetoric, telling an audience in Oct. 1942 that they could expect Roosevelt to "abolish Congress" within the next four years.The Lewiston Daily Sun, Oct 23, 1942, p. 1 During the early Cold War Hale supported the formation and role of the United Nations but was otherwise on the right wing of the Republican Party during the Truman administration. In 1950 he said of Sen. Joseph McCarthy that "people should give him credit for what he is trying to do instead of carping on his methods", a position opposite to that of his Maine Republican colleague Sen.
During the liberal régime of 1820–1823 Clemencín took office as colonial minister, was exiled till 1827, and in 1833 published the first volume of his edition (1833–1839) of Don Quixote. Its merits were recognized by his appointment as royal librarian, but he did not long enjoy his triumph: he died on July 30, 1834. His commentary on Don Quixote owes something to John Bowle, and was described in the 1911 edition of Encyclopædia Britannica as "disfigured by a patronizing, carping spirit"; nevertheless it is a valuable work of its kind for its time. Clemencín is also the author of an interesting Elogio de la reina Isabel la Católica, published as the sixth volume of the Memorias of the Spanish Academy of History, to which body he was elected on September 12, 1800.
For apart from the agreeable > material aspects, I would hope that no-one would then ask more of me than > this, and I could devote myself in peace to the things to which I am really > attached.” The German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck blocked the planned appointment, writing about Eulenburg that “I like him personally; he is amiable, but politically he was little sense of what is important and what is not; he allows himself to be influenced by carping gossip, passes it on and this way needlessly puts people’s backs up”. Bismarck stated Eulenburg was acceptable as ambassador to a small, unimportant state like Oldenburg, but was “impossible” for a major state like Bavaria. Thanks to Bismarck, in November 1888 Eulenburg was appointed the Prussian ambassador to the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg instead of Bavaria as he wanted.
Betty Garrett, in four interludes called "7 Minutes of Life," including one as a baby, playfully swirls a choric motif. In "1932" by Terry Kingsley-Smith (producer Griggs directing sublime performances by Jeanne Bates and Tom Dahlgren) and Drew Katzman's "I'm Tired of Looking for Barrymore" (Aubuchon staging an uproarious Hollywood cemetery outing between Guy Raymond's carping father and Katzman's patronizing son), the production finds its sturdiest moorings. LA Times Review of Lifetimes In June 2000 Former Miss America Lee Meriwether starred with Bridget Hanley in the world premiere of Eugene Pack's "Elinor Adjusting" at Theatre West in L.A. The comedy ran for a four-week run at Theatre West where Hanley portrayed Elinor, a widow who finds herself without a home or a business after her husband dies. Meriwether appears in a supporting role as Elinor's chum, Millie.
Lorando Jones, a prominent sculptor with previous exhibitions at the Royal Academy and the Victorian Society of Fine Arts declared that "those caricatures filling the spandrels at the Post Office are alti-mezzi-relievi, and not 'bas-reliefs' as Mr. Barnet called them..." His comments were however eventually disregarded as personal and bitter, given Jones had previously been refused a commission by Barnet after Jones had been convicted of blasphemy in 1871. J.J. De Libra, an art critic and writer, commented that the subject matter was commendable but that it the carvings were unsatisfactory because of "the execution of the design, and the degree of the relief." With the rising tide of criticism, a newspaper of the time finally lamented that Barnet "...[now] stands alone against a world of carping critics." Example of the established Classical allegorical figures used on the spandrels of the George Street façade.
Because of the resulting complex relationship between Christian and chivalric ideals in Sir Isumbras, literary criticism of the romance over the past several decades has been dominated by questions over its generic identity. One of the first scholars to explore the similarities between Sir Isumbras and St. Eustace was Laurel Braswell. In her 1965 article, “Sir Isumbras and the Legend of Saint Eustace,” Braswell critiques William of Nassington's dismissal of the tale as “veyn carping” and argued that it had actually been transliterated from the hagiographic material.Laurel Braswell, "Sir Isumbras and the Legend of Saint Eustace," Medieval Studies 27 (1965), 128-51. However, unlike later scholars, she does not find the reworking of the material problematic, calling the story “an artistic synthesis.” Braswell, 151. A few years later, in his 1969 book The Middle English Romances of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, Dieter Mehl included Sir Isumbras in a sub-category of tales he labeled “homiletic romances.”Dieter Mehl, The Middle English Romances of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, (New York: Barnes and Noble, Inc.

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